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Perilla
frutescens
SHISO ‘GREEN’
Love basil? Try Shiso.
This flavorful herb, often used in Asian cooking, deserves a
place beside basil and cilantro in every culinary herb garden.
Similar to the more commonly found red and purple perillas,
Shiso 'Green' has a stronger, more gingery flavor. Use chopped
shiso in fruit salads or with tossed greens, steamed vegetables,
grilled fish or chicken. Add shredded shiso to tuna and humus
sandwich spreads, mild curries, and stir fries, or to garnish
entrees and cold soups and entrees. Wrap grilled prawns in large
shiso leaves before serving, or sprinkle it over fresh tomato
slices. The plant's cinnamon-scented white or pink flowers are
edible and can be added to soups, salads, or used as garnish as
well.
ABOUT SHISO
Also known as Japanese basil, cinnamon plant, or beefsteak
plant, Shiso 'Green' is found naturally in Asia from India to
Japan, where it is popular as a culinary and medicinal herb.
Shiso was brought to the U.S. as early as 1800 by Japanese and
Korean immigrants, who grew this useful herb wherever they
settled. Shiso has now naturalized in much of Missouri,
Arkansas, and the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Today, ethnic food stores in the United States that cater to
people from Korea and Japan generally carry some perilla
products including fresh greens in season, seed oil, pickled
plums, plum sauce, and other condiments. Vigorous and
attractive, shiso is easy to grow, providing fresh greens and
herbs for your table and making an attractive backdrop in the
border. Red, purple, and green shiso often sold as perillas are
becoming popular summer bedding annuals. Their dramatic,
colorful, textured foliage make sun loving perillas valuable in
mixed containers and borders as well as the kitchen garden.
CULINARY USES
A member of the mint (Lamiaceae) family, Shiso 'Green' has
bright green, ginger-flavored leaves with a spicy cinnamon scent
and is rich in carotene, vitamin C, and iron. Japanese and
Korean cooks use perilla leaves fresh or pickled to flavor rice,
fish, soups, and vegetables, or chopped with ginger root in stir
fries, tempura, and salads. Sweet, pungent Shiso leaves also
make a tasty addition to mesclun salad mixes, as a garnish for
sushi, or chopped and added to pesto, cheese balls, or herb
mustards. And, unlike Red or Purple Perilla, which can dye any
dish a deep pink, Shiso 'Green' won't discolor other foods to
which it is added. The flowers are edible as well and make a
delicious, fragrant tea. Harvest leaves from the plant as needed
throughout the summer, selecting fragrant leaves with a fresh
green color.
Summery Shiso Salad
2 cups jicama, peeled and thinly sliced
2 cups cherry tomatoes, cut in half
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/3 cup shiso, shredded
1 lime, quartered
In a bowl, combine jicama, tomatoes, and sea salt. Toss gently.
Add shiso and serve, spritzed with a lime wedge. Serves 4.
Blueberry Salad With Shiso Dressing
2 cups thinly sliced cucumber
2 cups blueberries
1 jalapeno pepper, finely chopped
1 cup plain yogurt (nonfat works fine)
1/2 cup shiso, shredded
1 tablespoon rice vinegar
1/2 teaspoon shoyu or soy sauce
Combine cucumber, blueberries, and jalapenos, divide between 4
salad bowls. In a food processor, combine yogurt, shiso, rice
vinegar, and soy sauce. Puree and drizzle over salad, passing
remaining dressing on the side. Serves 4.
Green Tea and Shiso Granita Ice with
Fresh Cherries
Place 2 tablespoons of loose green tea, 6 shiso leaves and 3/4
cup sugar in a medium-sized mixing bowl. Add 3 cups of boiling
water, stir to dissolve the sugar, and let steep for 5 minutes.
Strain into a clean bowl and cool to room temperature. Once it's
cooled, stir again and place the bowl in the freezer for about
an hour, until the mixture begins to freeze around the edges and
across the surface. Whisk to break up the ice crystals. Return
to the freezer. Remove and whisk again once an hour until all
the liquid has frozen and has a grainy consistency, about five
hours. When you're ready to serve it, spoon scoops into serving
bowls and top with fresh cherries.
Log House Plants Cottage Grove, Oregon
© 2007 Log House Plants |
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